THE ENEMY'S SLIMNESS
■ - AN INGENIOUS RUSE. ■ ' / By Telegraph—Press Association—Copyright •- London, July 12. "Eye-Witness," with the British Hoadquarters, gives an example of the enomy's slimness. "When they saw a British-aeroplaneusing daylight, flares, the Germans concentrated l tlieir gunfire on specific areas on our line, to make us imagine' that' the. aeroplane was an enemy one directing the German artillery, and thus induce us to shell it. The underlying idea of the ruse was distinctly ingenious." Another trick of, the Germans is: Knowing the British weakness for collating souvenirs, they are leaving about in the trenches bright helmets containing' bombs; which explode when picked UP- C .
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Dominion, Volume 8, Issue 2519, 14 July 1915, Page 7
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104THE ENEMY'S SLIMNESS Dominion, Volume 8, Issue 2519, 14 July 1915, Page 7
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